By ADAM LONDON

For the Gazette

AMHERST – In an interstate battle, the UMass baseball team fell to Boston College 11-5, dropping its overall season record to 5-11.

The Eagles put the Minutemen in a 3-0 hole early in the first inning Wednesday at Earl Lorden Field.

BCโ€™s Jake Polamaki led off the game with a double, advanced to third on a ball in the dirt and eventually scored on a passed ball.

Stephen Sauter continued the first inning production, taking UMass starter Ryan Venditti deep for a two-run home run two batters later.

Boston College pushed the lead to 5-0 in the second following a Michael Strem solohome run and Donovan Casey sacrifice fly.

The Eagles chased Venditti with one out in the second inning.

UMass cut the margin to 5-3 following a second-inning RBI double from freshman Cooper Mrowka and third inning solo shots from Dylan Morris and John Jennings.

However, thatโ€™s as close as the Minutemen would get.

Despite an RBI double from Jennings and sacrifice fly from Hunter Carey in the later innings, the Eagles maintained at least a three-run lead for the rest of the game.

โ€œItโ€™s tough any time you get down like that,โ€ Jennings said. โ€œItโ€™s tough to stay up and have energy and stay focused. But I thought we did a pretty good job in the first couple innings to cut down the lead, but we couldnโ€™t sustain it.โ€

UMass coach Mike Stone was blunt after the game, citing the loss to ineffective starting pitching.

โ€œRyan obviously wasnโ€™t effective,โ€ he said. โ€œHe didnโ€™t really have any success, and thatโ€™s unfortunate because in the past heโ€™s been a guy we can count on. But he knows he didnโ€™t pitch well today and that he didnโ€™t give us a chance to win the ball game. Ultimately it comes down to that.โ€

On the offensive end, Stone stressed the importance of hitting with runners in scoring position, which has plagued UMass all season.

โ€œThatโ€™s been one of our issues all year, our RBI hitting,โ€ he said. โ€œWe havenโ€™t cashed in enough. As a hitter, thatโ€™s when you want to hit the most, you would think. Anyone who has played the game loves hitting when runners are in scoring position. We just havenโ€™t done that well enough yet.โ€

Despite a poor overall record, Morris has confidence that the team will bounce back in the remaining half of the season.

โ€œI think our overall record right now doesnโ€™t show how good of a team we really are,โ€ he said. โ€œThereโ€™s a lot of season left, and I think we have a lot to prove coming up in the next couple weeks here. I think our team is going to fight back and play well. We have a lot more left in the tank.โ€

UMassโ€™ remaining schedule will feature predominately conference opponents. After a three-game series against Atlantic 10 foe Davidson last weekend, which featured a 7-1 victory and narrow 5-4 extra-inning defeat, Jennings believes the Minutemen are able to compete with anyone in the conference.

โ€œI think last weekend we showed that we can play with the better teams in the league,โ€ he said. โ€œI think that will continue, we just have to focus a little bit more and sharpen up. If we can cut down on the mistakes and have good pitching, I think wins will start coming our way.โ€

Following the tough loss to the Eagles, and multiple disappointing defeats throughout the season, Morris expressed the importance of being resilient as a team.

โ€œI think whatโ€™s going to make or break this team is how we respond to when we get hit in the mouth,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™s easy to be playing hard and confidently when youโ€™re up 5-0 in a game, but itโ€™s when youโ€™re down in the game, or after youโ€™ve lost a few, itโ€™s how you play in those moments that I think will determine the success of this team this year.โ€

UMass will take the field again Saturday at 1 p.m., as they take on Rhode Island at Earl Lorden Field.